Exploring the causes and consequences of cooperative behaviour in wild animal populations using a social network approach
Understanding why individuals carry out behaviours that benefit others, especially genetically unrelated others, has been a major undertaking in many fields and particularly in biology. Here, we focus on the cooperation literature from natural populations and present the benefits of a social network...
Main Authors: | Gokcekus, S, Cole, EF, Sheldon, BC, Firth, JA |
---|---|
Formato: | Journal article |
Idioma: | English |
Publicado em: |
Wiley
2021
|
Registos relacionados
-
Social familiarity and spatially variable environments independently determine reproductive fitness in a wild bird
Por: Gokcekus, S, et al.
Publicado em: (2023) -
Drivers of passive leadership in wild songbirds: species-level differences and spatio-temporally dependent intraspecific effects
Por: Gokcekus, S, et al.
Publicado em: (2021) -
Partner’s age, not social environment, predicts extrapair paternity in wild great tits (Parus major)
Por: Roth, AM, et al.
Publicado em: (2019) -
Recognising the key role of individual recognition in social networks
Por: Gokcekus, S, et al.
Publicado em: (2021) -
The maintenance and spread of cooperation in social networks in natural populations
Por: Gokcekus, S
Publicado em: (2023)